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         Early 
            Signs
        
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             Michael:
            
           
           I remember driving back from Yosemite with you - I'm sure this 
              was over twenty years ago. It was after dark, I'd been driving for 
              quite a while, and was really tired. I pulled over and you amiably 
              jumped into the driver's seat of my old van. But after maybe ten 
              minutes you complained that lately you'd been having trouble seeing 
              at night, and felt it was unsafe to continue driving. I remember 
              grudgingly getting back behind the wheel, thinking you were malingering, 
              or at least exaggerating a very minor problem. Was that around the 
              time that you first began to notice some difficulty with night vision?
          
         
         
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           Joel
          
         
         
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         Not really. I remember stumbling around in the woods at night as a 
            kid at summer camp, feeling mortified as I realized that the others 
            were navigating quite confidently by the beams of their flashlights. 
            Still, the deficiency never seemed quite dramatic enough to deter 
            me from driving at night, until I was in my mid-twenties. I still 
            felt safe enough in town, amidst the glow of city lights and street 
            lamps, but that sense of security disappeared when I found myself 
            driving along the ocean in fog, or in the deep, impenetrable blackness 
            of the highway home from Yosemite that night, with you.
        
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           Michael:
          
         
         
         
         How did you learn that your difficulty seeing couldn't be corrected 
            with glasses?
        
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            Joel
           
          
          
           :
          
          I'd worn glasses since about first grade, just to correct 
              for nearsightedness. It was completely by accident that I found 
              out about the RP. I Got a killer case of conjunctivitis, you know, 
              "pink eye," went to the U.C. San Francisco Medical Center's Ophthalmology 
              clinic just for that, and the doctor noticed possible indications 
              of the disease on my retinas. He sent me for a round of diagnostic 
              tests as soon as my infection had cleared up. The tests were strange 
              and a little surreal. When I consulted with him about the tests 
              results, that's when I knew.
         
         
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           Michael
          
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          I'm curious about that process, if you feel okay talking about it. 
              Not so much the mechanics of the testing, but more what you went 
              through emotionally when you heard bad things, and then worse things, 
              about your eyesight. I would think that getting news like that would 
              be not just painful, but also unbelievable, as though they were 
              talking about somebody else.
         
         
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           Joel
          
         
         
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         You said it, Michael. The diagnosis of RP and its intimations of future 
            blindness so startled and dismayed me that I pushed it almost completely 
            out of consciousness, within days. I did study the brochures explaining 
            what little was understood about the disease then (mid-70's) and illustrated 
            with approximations of how my sight would deteriorate. And I told 
            my girlfriend, Susan, whose father was a doctor and who knew to take 
            such things seriously. Regardless, I found some way to discourage 
            her continuing interest, and soon managed to forget where I'd filed 
            those brochures or, more accurately, hidden them from myself. Textbook 
            denial.
        
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           Michael
          
         
         
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         Was there a particular event or series of events that forced you to 
            acknowledge that your vision was irreversibly diminished? I know (from 
            some conversations we had back then) you weren't walking around in 
            a state of absolute denial, but I wonder if you remember a point in 
            time where a shift occurred--where you began to see yourself as someone 
            with a serious disability.
        
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           Joel
          
         
         
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         Yes, I acknowledged having RP. But, as you conjectured, I actually 
            felt as if this diagnosis had befallen someone else, and carried on. 
            The reality closed in gradually at first: Night driving became impossibly 
            harrowing, even around town, and then I realized I frequently missed 
            things others could see, in daylight. Then my newly-prescribed reading 
            glasses failed to restore the printed word to clarity, and an eye 
            exam revealed that my visual fields were diminished and broken up. 
            But the final cosmic notification came when I nearly ran over a jaywalking 
            kid. That's when I understood I had crossed over into the realm of 
            permanent, irrefutable disability.
        
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           Michael
          
         
         
          :
         
         
          I know you've written elsewhere about that accident, and won't ask 
            you to rehash the circumstances. (See: Joel's Journal article,
          
           The 
            Day I Quit Driving
          
          ) But I'm wondering what the experience of, 
            essentially, categorizing (or recategorizing) yourself was like, with 
            its implications in so many areas of your life.
         
        
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           Joel
          
         
         
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         The re-categorization, as you put it, was brutal. Relinquishing my 
            car threatened to crush all hope. It wasn't just the loss of practical 
            independence, but the loss of a sense of prospects, of the right to 
            keep dreaming in a very American way that the future might yet, against 
            all evidence, still hold every reward of work and comfort of love 
            that an uncertain middle-aged late bloomer might yearn to attain. 
            "What does not change / is the will to change," goes the reassuring, 
            exhorting line in Charles Olson's "The Kingfishers," a line I still 
            hold close to me and try to believe is true. But the onslaught of 
            gloomy thoughts that dominated my mood then boded poorly. The main 
            thought, the one that stained the rest like death, was that I was 
            now, unarguably, disabled, with all the most incapacitating implications 
            that can attach to the word.
        
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           Michael
          
         
         
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         I remember talking to you shortly after the accident with the pedestrian, 
            and you were clearly shaken. But I did not grasp what a profound realization 
            that event had forced on you, or how devastating it was. No doubt 
            my own density and denial played a part: I have to admit that most 
            of the time there's something like a ten year lag between the actual 
            state of your vision and how I imagine it. The fact that we live in 
            different cities doesn't help, but I'm sure some of it is my own inability 
            to acknowledge the extent and implications of your disability.
        
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           Joel
          
         
         
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         I think a big reason for that gap really is denial, actually. No matter 
            what I explain, or even what I write. While sympathetic strangers 
            and acquaintances, and readers who don't know me tend to overestimate 
            the extent of my blindness and incapacity, my intimate friends, by 
            comparison, persistently underestimate both. When we're out together, 
            I often have to remind them to guide me through a dark restaurant, 
            or implore them to be more verbal when I sense they've forgotten I 
            can't see their facial expressions, or even see their faces at all, 
            straight on. Sometimes their discomfiture is really palpable. I think 
            we don't want to believe things like this can happen to those we care 
            for, both from heartfelt pity as well as because our friends' injuries 
            and illnesses remind us of our own fragility, of limitation, of death. 
            So, unconsciously, we switch on cognitive governors to slow the rate 
            of our comprehension. And why not, I ask you.
        
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